Israel president threatened over 'Jewish terrorism' comment
Rivlin had written a Facebook post following Friday's arson attack on a Palestinian family's home in the West Bank
JERUSALEM:
Israeli police have opened an investigation into threats on social media against President Reuven Rivlin following his condemnation of "Jewish terrorism" after a firebombing killed a Palestinian child, a presidential spokesman said Monday.
Rivlin had written a Facebook post following Friday's arson attack on a Palestinian family's home in the West Bank village of Duma by suspected Jewish extremists.
The attack killed 18-month-old Ali Saad Dawabsha and left his parents and four-year-old brother critically wounded.
"More than shame, I feel pain," Rivlin wrote in Arabic and Hebrew. "The pain over the murder of a little baby. The pain over my people choosing the path of terrorism and losing their humanity.
Read: Palestinian youth dies after West Bank clash with Israeli troops
"Their path is not the path of the State of Israel and is not the path of the Jewish people. Unfortunately, it seems that so far we've dealt with the phenomenon of Jewish terrorism limply," he wrote, calling for concrete measures against such extremists.
Rivlin's post evoked a wave of more than 2,000 comments, some positive but others attacking him and recalling Israelis killed by Palestinians.
"Dirty traitor. Your end will be worse than (Ariel) Sharon's," said one comment quoted by the Maariv newspaper, referring to the late former Israeli premier who spent eight years in a coma.
Read: Palestinian killed during arrest attempt: Israel police
Another said: "In Russia you would have been found by this point cut up inside a shoe box."
Police said they had received material from the president's security team and had ordered an investigation to "examine offensive publications against the president on social media."
Israeli legal officials could not say whether incitement to violence was among the suspected crimes under investigation.
In 1995, then prime minister Yitzhak Rabin was gunned down at a peace rally in Tel Aviv by a Jewish extremist after a campaign of right-wing incitement against a peace deal with the Palestinians.
Israeli police have opened an investigation into threats on social media against President Reuven Rivlin following his condemnation of "Jewish terrorism" after a firebombing killed a Palestinian child, a presidential spokesman said Monday.
Rivlin had written a Facebook post following Friday's arson attack on a Palestinian family's home in the West Bank village of Duma by suspected Jewish extremists.
The attack killed 18-month-old Ali Saad Dawabsha and left his parents and four-year-old brother critically wounded.
"More than shame, I feel pain," Rivlin wrote in Arabic and Hebrew. "The pain over the murder of a little baby. The pain over my people choosing the path of terrorism and losing their humanity.
Read: Palestinian youth dies after West Bank clash with Israeli troops
"Their path is not the path of the State of Israel and is not the path of the Jewish people. Unfortunately, it seems that so far we've dealt with the phenomenon of Jewish terrorism limply," he wrote, calling for concrete measures against such extremists.
Rivlin's post evoked a wave of more than 2,000 comments, some positive but others attacking him and recalling Israelis killed by Palestinians.
"Dirty traitor. Your end will be worse than (Ariel) Sharon's," said one comment quoted by the Maariv newspaper, referring to the late former Israeli premier who spent eight years in a coma.
Read: Palestinian killed during arrest attempt: Israel police
Another said: "In Russia you would have been found by this point cut up inside a shoe box."
Police said they had received material from the president's security team and had ordered an investigation to "examine offensive publications against the president on social media."
Israeli legal officials could not say whether incitement to violence was among the suspected crimes under investigation.
In 1995, then prime minister Yitzhak Rabin was gunned down at a peace rally in Tel Aviv by a Jewish extremist after a campaign of right-wing incitement against a peace deal with the Palestinians.